It's a nice system but it is flawed.
For example.
Di Resta was going wheel to wheel week in week out with Torro Rosso, Sauber, Renault and on odd occasion Mercedes.
The williams cars were going wheel to wheel with their self for the most part, and on odd occasion Lotus.
So there is true scope.
the reason i see Maldonado as not deserving his seat is because. (granted Monaco was a good drive but we all expected him to do well there he's abit of a master of it.) He never seemed to show that cutting edge. He was almost as if he was going through the motions, there was never anything remarkable from him.
Now compare that to Hulkenberg the previous season.
Yes it was a better car but he regularly kept Barrichello on his toes. Barrichello had a lack lustre season and I don't think he ever felt the pressure of Maldonado the same way as the other rookies exerted it on their tema mates.
Paul Di Resta is a great example of that.
Even Daniel Riciardo applied pressure on his more experienced team mate and that car is and was the dog of the field.
I'm not syaing he doesn't deserve a seat in F1.I just feel that maybe he should be in lesser car. having said that you can't get much worse than Williams at the moment. But I think you get my point.
But the thing is that you are still racing against your teammate, no matter where you are on the grid.
That is really what it comes down to at the end of the day. the speed of the car or where on the grid you start is not as important as beating your own teammate.
They weren´t always running for themselves, like China where Williams ended up ahead of STR, Force India, and Lotus.
At Turkey Barrichello was ahead of Jamie.
At Spain Maldonado was ahead of Jamie.
At Monaco Barrichello was ahead of Buemi, Rosberg, Di Resta and had Maldonado not been in trouble with Hamilton he would probably have ended up 7th ahead of Sutil and Heidfeld.
In Canada Rubens was ahead of Buemi and Rosberg.
In Europe Rubens was ahead of Buemi, Di Resta, Petrov, Kobayashi and Schumacher.
In Britain both Williams drivers was ahead of Di Resta.
In Germany Maldo was ahead of Buemi.
Hungary we saw Rubens finish ahead of Sutil and Perez.
In Belgium we saw Maldo finish ahead of Di Resta, Kobayashi and Senna.
Singapore Maldo was ahead of Buemi, Kobayashi, Senna while Rubens was ahead of Koba and Senna.
Japan Maldo finished ahead of Jamie and Senna.
In Korea Rubens was ahead of Senna, Koba, Perez
Abu Dhabi Rubens was ahead of Jamie, Petrov and Senna, Maldo ahead of Jamie and Senna.
In Brazil we saw Rubens finish higher then Schumacher.
so the idea that Williams mostly ran by themselves between the backmarkers and middlemarkers for most of the time i find very hard to believe.
As far as Hulkenberg goes and keeping Barrichello on his toes... He finished 25 points further back.
As far as qualifying goes Barrichello had the advantage of having the average gap of -0.140 seconds to Hulkenberg.
So in terms of Qualifying, Maldonado has done a better job at keeping up with Barrichello then what Hulkenberg did. Maldo actually beat Barrichello in Qualifying pace wise.
And had he not been crashed out in Monaco he would have finished ahead of Barrichello in the standings.
If none of that is impressive for a rookie i don´t know what is to be honest.
Should i continue?